Mordechai Rosenstein, illuminating Jewish calligrapher, dies at 90 in Pennsylvania
Unique brightly colored works that featured stretched out and manipulated Hebrew letters are displayed in countless homes and synagogues around the world
Andrew Silow-Carroll is the editor-in-chief of JTA
JTA — Mordechai Rosenstein, a painter and calligrapher whose brightly colored illuminations of Hebrew texts adorn countless Jewish homes, offices, and synagogues, died on July 9 in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania. He was 90.
His signature pieces featured Hebrew letters that he stretched and manipulated, with bright swaths of colors weaving in and out of the ensuing shapes — a vibrant combination of ‘60s pop art and the illuminated Hebrew manuscripts of the Middle Ages.
Synagogues and Jewish organizations often present Rosenstein prints to honorees, with text appropriate to their service or occupations. One of his best-known pieces, based on the Biblical phrase “Justice, justice, you shall pursue” (Deuteronomy 16:20), is a frequent gift for Jewish lawyers and judges.
His art “has a modern way of looking at the Torah and a modern way of looking at the Hebrew alphabet because his pieces are not black and white people praying at the [Western] Wall,” Barry Magen, his business partner since 2003, told the Philadelphia Jewish Exponent in 2022. “It’s very bright and creative, full of color and full of life, and, really, the big thing is that they’re happy.”
In workshops and classes, Rosenstein would frequently tell audiences that all Hebrew calligraphy derives from the tiny letter “Yud” — often used as an abbreviation for the name of God — whose teardrop shape is replicated in the brushstrokes for nearly all Hebrew letters.
Rosenstein was born on March 26, 1934, and raised in the Strawberry Mansion neighborhood of Philadelphia to an American-born mother and Russian immigrant father. He attended Akiba Hebrew Academy, a Jewish day school now called the Jack M. Barrack Hebrew Academy. There he began creating a Purim Megillah, using a self-taught method that hinted at what would become his signature style.
“As far as I knew, there was no scribe in Philadelphia, no sofer,” he told the Exponent, using the Hebrew word for a calligrapher. “And there were no books from Israel showing all the typefaces.”
Rosenstein’s mother supported him in his artistic ambitions, buying him art supplies. He attended the Philadelphia Museum of Art and served a two-year stint in the US Army, drawing training aids for weapons and equipment. After his service, he moved to New York City, where he worked as a stylist in the textile industry.
For his own wedding to Mati Kaufman, he created a ketubah, or illuminated wedding contract, and soon did the same for other Jewish couples.
In 1967, Rosenstein returned to Philadelphia to work as the foreman at an uncle’s frame factory, where he continued until the business was sold a decade later. Rosenstein struggled as the owner of his own frame shop in Northeast Philadelphia but caught a lucky break in the early 1970s when an art consultant for Gratz College, Rita Poley, offered to show his work.
“Over the next few years, I took advantage of every opportunity I could to publicly present Mordechai’s work,” Poley recalled in 2017.
By 1979, Rosenstein had turned his art into a full-time career, eventually creating over 700 original pieces. In his workshops, he would often collaborate with community members to create art pieces for their synagogues.
In a eulogy delivered at his funeral on July 10, his daughter Lisa Rosenstein spoke about his popularity as a Judaica artist. “Partly joking, I say that you are in more synagogues than God,” she said, addressing her late father. “Everyone thinks they know you because your art lives in their homes with them every day.”
Mordechai Rosenstein Justice 69 Signed Limited Ed Serigraph Judaic Law DEUT16:20 https://t.co/VcXJLtIQei pic.twitter.com/iOCNUCqbiP
— Signed Autographed (@SigAutograph) July 26, 2018
Another of his most popular pieces was a depiction of a physician’s oath attributed to Maimonides, which includes a stylized portrait of the medieval sage hugged by Hebrew and English text. The inscription could also be seen as a fitting maxim for the calligrapher: “Inspire me with love for my art and for thy creatures.”
His survivors include his wife Mati; a son, Judah Rosenstein; his daughter Lisa (Beth Styles); and two grandchildren, Ava Pearlman and Caleb Rosenstein.